171 Mo. 198 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1902
This is a suit under the statute for the partition of certain real estate in Sullivan •county, owned by Thomas Dobbins, who died, intestate, on May 23, 1896. The parties are his children. The plaintiff claims one-thirteenth part of the property. The principal contention of the defendants is that the plaintiff received advancements from their father amounting to more than his aliquot share of the land here involved, and hence he is not entitled to any further part of the estate. The plaintiff claims that the personal property is more than sufficient to pay all of the debts of the estate, and that his distributive share of the personalty is more than enough to extinguish the advancements he received, and therefore he is now entitled to his part of the realty. The plaintiff admits he received advancements, but claims they do not amount to more than thirty-five or thirty-six hundred dollars. The case was tried before the court, no instructions were asked or given, and no finding of facts asked, but a very elaborate and exhaustive one was made by the court, and it is preserved in the record. The court found that the personalty remaining in the bands of the administrators is only sufficient to pay the taxes and the probate fees; that the aggregate value of the estate, ascertained by adding together the advancements made by the father in his lifetime, the payments made by the administrators on distribution, and
I.
This is an action under the statute for the partition of realty. It is not a proceeding in equity for the partition of an equitable estate. [Reed v. Robertson, 45 Mo. 580.] The evidence as to the amount of advancements received by the plaintiff is conflicting. The plaintiff admitted that he. received thirty-five or thirty-six hundred dollars. The defendants introduced evidence tending to show that he received $5,012.40. The court found that the amount he received was $5,012.40. Under these circumstances it is not the practice of this court to disturb the judgment of the trial court on a question of fact. [James v. Insurance Co., 148 Mo. 1.]
But aside from this rule there is abundant and very persuasive evidence showing that the finding of the court is correct. In the first place, there is a statement signed by the plaintiff himself showing that on December 9, 1882, he owed his father $3,412.40, which sum is therein shown to be made up of the following items:
80 acres land at $20 per acre...............$1,600.00
14 acres land at $11 per acre............... 154.00
2 Horses................................. 160.00
1 Cow............'....................... ,30.00
$1,944.00
Cash paid................................ 1,468.40
$3,412.40
The defendants showed that their father kept accurate accounts, on separate slips of paper, of advancements he made to each of his children, and that those slips were found among his papers. The defendants offered, and the court admitted in evidence, the following slip:
“My son George Dobbins has drawn from my estate up to the first of July, 1883, $4,012.40 in land and money, but on said land owes 1,000 thousand to be paid to me or heirs at 6 per cent owing to his having drawn this amount over his share his note to be drawn on the first day of March in 1883.”
The plaintiff contends that the trial court misconstrued this document, and erred in holding that the one thousand dollars, for which a note was to be given, was an additional indebtedness to the four thousand and twelve dollars and forty cents.
The infirmity underlying this contention is that there is nothing in this record to show that the court placed such a construction upon the paper. The find
It is further contended that as it is always a question of intention whether money or property that a parent has turned over to a child-was a gift or an advancement (Ray v. Loper, 65 Mo. 473, Ladd v. Stephens, 147 Mo. 1. c. 334); and that inasmuch as the deed to the land recites a money consideration and there is no evidence showing that the plaintiff did not pay to his father the consideration mentioned in the deed, it must be conclusively taken as the established fact that the second eighty acres was a purchase and not an advancement.
It is a fair deduction from these facts and circumstances that as the plaintiff never paid for the first eighty and the fourteen acres, he did not pay for the last eighty either. This is at least enough to raise a doubt as to the verity of the recital in the deed that the plaintiff paid thirty-three hundred and fifty-four dollars for the one hundred and seventy-four acres, and likewise enough to impair the presumption arising from that recital in the deed that he paid anything for the second eighty. But in addition to this there is not only a total absence of any evidence in' this record, outside of the recital in the deed, tending to show that the plaintiff ever paid his father anything, at any time,' for any purpose, but on the contrary the evidence, taken as a whole, compels the conviction that no part of the consideration mentioned in the deed was paid in cash or its equivalent, but that it was all an advancement by the father to the son. There is no room for the contention that the father ever intended -anything he gave his children to be a gift, but on the contrary it is clear, even from the testimony of the plaintiff’s witnesses, that the father kept strict accounts
It is argued further that the plaintiff had a lot of hogs 'and cattle, of the value of eight or nine hundred dollars, which he left on his father’s place when he went away from home, and which his father sold and got the money for, and that the plaintiff furnished materials and did work, in repairing his father’s house and barn, amounting to two hundred and fifty dollars, and that the trial court erred in not deducting these sums from the advancements he received.
Three effective obstacles to the success of this contention in this court, are presented by the record:' First. There is a sharp conflict in the testimony as to ’ whether the plaintiff owned any such hogs or cattle or whether they did not belong to the father. Moreover, there is evidence to the effect that when the plaintiff left the farm he was not of age and had no property, and that the work he did, if indeed he did any, about repairing the house and barn, was done while he was a minor, living at home with his father and being supported by him. Second. All these matters occurred in 1879, and as they were not specifically claimed as credits by the plaintiff in his written settlement with his father on December 9, 1882, they must be construed to have been taken into account when that settlement was made and are concluded by that settlement, and the plaintiff can not be heard now to assert such claims. Third. There is nothing shown by this record that the
These matters have been set forth in extenso for the double purpose of illustrating the wisdom of the rule of practice that this court will not disturb the judgment of the trial court on matters of fact where there is any substantial evidence to support it, and of showing that the judgment of the trial court is for the right party and that there are no errors in the record which, materially affect the appellant’s rights, and therefore under the statute (E. S. 1899, sec. 865), it is the duty of this court to affirm the judgment.
The judgment is affirmed.